Shakespeare in the Park, the New York theater institution that is currently staging a Donald Trump-inspired performance of Julius Caesar, is still feeling the ripple effects of its politically charged decision. And those ripples are spreading far beyond New York: at Shakespearean theaters in Massachusetts, Texas, and Washington, D.C., artistic directors have received rape and death threats. Unbelievably enough, the threats weren’t spurred by similar Trump-inspired productions—but because apparently, vitriolic people are lazily Googling Shakespeare in the Park, then messaging threats to the first result they see.

At Shakespeare Dallas, a theater company in Texas, artistic director Raphael Parry wagers that they’ve received about 80 online threats. “We just got slammed,” he tells The Boston Globe. “It’s pretty amazing the vitriol, the wishing we would die and our family would die. A whole lot of them say that we should burn in hell.”

At Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, Mass., the staff has been threatened via e-mail, phone calls, and social-media posts, per the Globe. “[H]ope you all who did this play about Trump are the first do [sic] die when ISIS COMES TO YOU [expletive] sumbags [sic],” one message read.

“We’re in an environment now where the verbal gloves are off,” Shakespeare & Company artistic director Allyn Burrows told the Globe.

The New York Classical Theatre, which performs in Central Park—like Shakespeare in the Park—has been pelted with messages, as has the Washington, D.C.-based Shakespeare Theatre Company, the Globe reports. Again, not because these companies are doing anything remotely Trump-inspired, but because angry trolls do not know how to use Google.

The vitriol was inspired by Shakespeare in the Park’s recent decision to present Julius Caesar with a modern twist: a Trump-esque Caesar, who has a Melania Trump-esque wife. The play kicked up backlash thanks to its most famous plot twist, in which Caesar is brutally stabbed to death. The theater defended its choice, explaining that the play ultimately argues that true democracy can never be earned through violent means. But that hasn’t stopped an endless parade of violent criticism, which began with social media—Donald Trump Jr. tweeted out a condemnation of the performance—then became tangible once sponsors like Delta and Bank of America dropped their support for the theatrical program. (Critics of that decision have pointed out that sponsors did not seem to have similar problems with a 2012 production of Julius Caesar that cast Barack Obama as the titular dictator.)

Still, Shakespeare in the Park has not discontinued its production, which inspired a few right-wing protesters to assemble and disrupt its performances over the weekend. On Friday night, a woman named Laura Loomerrushed the stage and called the show “political violence.” Her interruption was filmed by Jack Posobiec, a blogger who helped spread the Pizzagate conspiracy theory. Moments after Loomer was escorted away by security, Posobiec stood up and shouted, “You are all Nazis like Joseph Goebbels!”

On Sunday night, there were more interruptions, with another protester rushing the stage within the first five minutes of Caesar, according to New York Times reporter Sopan Deb, and shouting, “Liberal hate kills!”

All interruptions aside, Deb added that the play was “truly excellent,” which is a cool salve for all the trouble Shakespeare in the Park has had to endure—trouble that has now been extended to Shakespearean theaters nationwide.

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